Tag Archives: journalism ethics

The Seattle Times gave Rob
McKenna and “Yes on 74” supporters free advertising, a full page’s
worth. Some of you will argue that we reporters do that all the
time based on who we write about, and in some sense you’re
correct.

But this is literal. It’s free advertising. In Public Disclosure
Commission terms, it’s Rob McKenna’s governor campaign getting an
$80,000 boost in the form of an independent expenditure. In other
words, the campaign doesn’t get the money, but it gets the
benefit.

The technicalities of all that are a side point. The real
question is whether the Seattle Times crossed a line. My thought is
whether you agree with what the Times did or not, it most certainly
crossed a line seldom, if ever, passed by traditional
newspapers.

That seems to be a real problem for some of the paper’s readers,
or former readers if their comments are to be believed. I read
those comments and there are many who are fine with the paper
expressing an opinion or offering an endorsement on an editorial
page, but to give any campaign a free ad appears to be downright
distasteful.

People think it baloney anyway the idea that we in the newsroom
don’t consort with the editorial page writers and the advertisers.
I can say it over and over that our coverage is not influenced by
who advertises with us or who we endorse, and some of you won’t
believe it. I understand why. Money and power influences anything
it can, which means almost everything. To think that it wouldn’t at
a newspaper seems challenging. But I’ll tell you again that I don’t
get instructions from the ad reps and that I don’t know any sooner
than you do who our paper will endorse. Some ad reps in the past
tried, but when they made demands I or my bosses told them to back
off. You don’t have to believe me. You should, but you don’t have
to.

“Copy for the ad had to be written, artwork had to be
prepared by someone,” said Jay Inslee Communications Director,
Sterling Clifford. “It is difficult to believe that none of the
Times’ supposedly neutral newsroom resources were used for this
partisan ad.“

I’ll tell you what’s difficult to believe, that anyone on Jay
Inslee’s staff has ever worked at a newspaper. Advertising staffs
have people who know how to write and create art. It’s what they
do. Prove me wrong, but as justifiably wounded as Inslee’s campaign
might feel, I have no problem believing the Times newsroom had no
knowledge of the ad.

That doesn’t make what the Times did acceptable. In the Times
own story on the decision, Jim Brunner gets comments from two
people who spend a lot of time considering things like newspaper
ethics. They both said the Times’ reporters’ credibility is at
stake.

“Regular people have trouble believing there is a wall
between the editorial side of news, and the reporting side. This
would seem to make that even more difficult. However the Times
rationalizes this, they are using the resources of the paper to
promote a candidate and cause preferred by the editorial side (and,
it would seem, ownership). Fair or not to you folks on the
reporting side, my sense is the public perception of the Times’
credibility and objectivity takes a big hit here,” said Todd
Donovan, political science professor at Western Washington
University.

And for me that’s the bigger problem. A corporation is under no
obligation to be fair to a political candidate. Corporations chose
sides. But also affecting a corporation’s bottom line is the
perceived credibility of its employees, and in this case that’s the
reporting staff in Seattle. We reporters are not perfect at being
fair, but almost everyone I’ve ever met from a traditional
newspaper tries to be. That’s worth something.

David Postman, a former Seattle Times political reporter whose
exit from the business for the PR world I’ve mourned for years,
(Though secretly sometimes I wish I could follow him out of here.)
offered a great discussion on
how journalists shoot their own credibility sometimes. It came in
2007 when people in the Times newsroom cheered when Karl Rove
announced his departure from the Bush White House.

We’re not perfect. We don’t need our employers messing up our
reputations anymore. While I continue to believe in the general
integrity of the Times’ newsroom, and while I can see how the
corporation that runs the paper could justify advertising how it
will and claim its newsroom is unaffected, this move isn’t doing
reporters there any favors. And on that point that Inslee’s
campaign may be right when its press release concludes, “The Times
asks readers to trust its reporters and trust its objectivity,”
Clifford said.”The Times’ management has made a decision that
raises serious questions for the people of Washington.”

UPDATE: Preserve Marriage Washington has issued its own
statement.

“This decision of the Seattle Times is a stunning example of
journalistic bias, greed and stupidity,” exclaimed Frank Schubert,
Campaign Director for Preserve Marriage Washington. “It is such a
poor decision on so many levels that it’s hard to react. First,
they have abandoned any pretense of objectivity and have seriously
damaged their brand as a result. People do not subscribe to
newspapers in order to be fed the political opinion of editors,
they subscribe to get the unvarnished news. The Times has put
themselves in the position of being seen as paid political
advocates, seriously undermining their journalistic credibility.
Worse, they are apparently so desperate for future revenue that
they are willing to openly sell themselves in order to show
political consultants how advertising with them will be good for
their clients. The whole thing smacks of a pay-to-play scheme. It
certainly begs the question if in exchange for a consultant
agreeing to advertise with the Times, the paper will run a paid
editorial supporting their client. I have been a political
consultant for 30 years — have twice been named the nation’s top
political consultant — and if the Times approached me with this
kind of idea, I’d want to go take a shower.”